I don’t sleep very well. It could be a factor of many things: the humidity, the whirring of my ceiling fan, the mosquito buzzing around my head, the hard thin foam mattress I sleep on, the ole fellas next door enjoying a night session or the packs of wild dogs howling and barking into the night.
I rise with sun and find that after throwing a few buckets of cold water over my head, I am slightly refreshed. I dress and head down for breakfast.
Breakfast is normally wheatabix with powdered milk, fruit and a cup of tea. On a weekend I’ll have a fried egg butty and for a treat I enjoy bread fried in coconut oil (no toaster) with peanut butter and jam. Bad Anna.

I walk the fifteen minutes into town, already bustling with streets venders selling bread and eggs, children making their way to school and trucks loaded with supplies and people heading off to the remote villages to work.

I jump on a bus to take me the 10 minutes to work, the upbeat reggae music lifting my spirits as we trundle along the jungle road. I think the bus service is amazing. There are about 5 buses run the service to Kilu’ufi Hospital so you never wait longer than 5 minutes. The young bus “conductor” jumps on and off at every stop, yelling his destination, picking up fares. It costs $3 Solomon Dollars (@ 50 cents or 25 pence) to go anywhere around town.
I arrive at the office at least an hour before anyone else (Solomon time) so settle into work before heading to the wards.

The days can vary. Sometimes I stay in the clinical areas. I am still finding my feet but it is such a foreign environment and I know this will take time. Other days I will head to the classroom to deliver training or stay in the office for research. I have so many ideas and plans. If anything is going to stop me, it will be the brick walls and barriers which are constructed in every place I look.

After work, I catch the bus back into town and head to the market. The market here is fabulous. It is on everyday and it is clean. The vegetables are organic, cheap and tasty, the fish straight off the boat and the bread is baked fresh.
The thing I like most is that you never get bothered and are free to browse at will. The hard sell and bartering that is so common in developing countries thankfully missing. Unfortunately, this is possibly due to the culture and how women are raised to be subdued and unassertive.
I then carry my load the fifteen minutes up the steep hill to the guest house. This time, as I throw another cold bucket of water over my head, I don’t miss a warm shower as much.
Life in the guest house

Hill Top is an interesting place to live and I am adjusting well to life in a guest house. It is mostly just me and George. George is the local bank manager who is painfully shy and never ventures from his room, so mostly, it’s just me.


Then it’s back to my room for an hour with my book or a movie before I bunker down to the sounds of the night, on my hard bed, in the humidity, with my whirring fan and the howling dogs. Goodnight.

Wow! You paint such a clear picture of your day to day life. Keep up the blood it is great!
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Thanks Sal. Not quite to the point where i feel like I’m giving up blood and guts but I’m sure there will be days 🙂 Great to know you’re following.
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Terrific stuff, Anna. If you are half as good at health working as you are at writing, The Solomom Islands are a safer place. Hope you never need a blog transfusion. Dadxxx
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Thanks Dad. If my writing is half as good as your jokes …………?
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Brilliant read Anna, sums up your days and surroundings perfectly x
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Brilliant read Anna, sums up your days and surroundings perfectly x
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